Aims: The aim of this study was to assess the safety and efficacy of dofetilide among patients refractory to other anti-arrhythmic drugs (AADs) and accepted for atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation.
Methods and results: One hundred and twenty-seven of 454 patients (69% male, 58% paroxysmal, age 60 +/- 10 years, AF duration 8 +/- 7 years) scheduled for AF ablation between February 2004 and May 2008 were treated with dofetilide. Patients had failed 1.9 +/- 1.1 AADs. Anti-arrhythmic drugs were stopped five half-lives before ablation and 3 months for amiodarone. Patients were followed for 15 +/- 7 months with routine and symptom-driven monitoring. Success was defined as no further AF and partial success as a 50% reduction in frequency/duration of AF episodes. Thirty-six patients started dofetilide 158 +/- 167 days before ablation: 9 had no improvement, 16 experienced partial success, 8 had no further AF, and 2 improved enough to forgo ablation. Seventy-one patients started dofetilide immediately following ablation, of which 14 had no improvement, 22 experienced partial success, and 32 had no further AF. Twenty patients started dofetilide 119 +/- 153 days post-ablation, of which four had no improvement, seven experienced partial success, and nine had no further AF. Six patients discontinued dofetilide during initiation for QT prolongation.
Conclusion: Dofetilide appears safe and effective in preventing AF in patients refractory to other AADs undergoing catheter ablation.